Lectures on the English Comic WritersDoubleday, 1960 - 239 oldal |
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72. oldal
William Hazlitt. poetic imagination , or for feeling the finer touches of nature , that he had felicity and force in ... feeling as con- nected with objects or circumstances more palpable and touch- ing ; but here the object was to ...
William Hazlitt. poetic imagination , or for feeling the finer touches of nature , that he had felicity and force in ... feeling as con- nected with objects or circumstances more palpable and touch- ing ; but here the object was to ...
73. oldal
... feeling into some barely possible consequence or recondite analogy , in which it required the utmost stretch of misapplied ingenuity to trace the smallest connection with the original impression . In short , the poetry of this period ...
... feeling into some barely possible consequence or recondite analogy , in which it required the utmost stretch of misapplied ingenuity to trace the smallest connection with the original impression . In short , the poetry of this period ...
206. oldal
... feeling of the moment is brought out , and carried to its utmost height , and then instantly seized and stamped on the canvass for ever . The expression is always taken en passant , in a state of progress or change , and , as it were ...
... feeling of the moment is brought out , and carried to its utmost height , and then instantly seized and stamped on the canvass for ever . The expression is always taken en passant , in a state of progress or change , and , as it were ...
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
absurdity acter admirable affectation amusing appear archy and mehitabel beauty Ben Jonson BRASS character Charlotte Brontë colour comedy common Congreve delightful DICK Dolphin Masters Don Quixote dramatic dress elegance Epicene equally excellent extravagance eyes face fancy farce feeling folly Francis Turner Palgrave genius Gil Blas give grace heart Hogarth Honoré de Balzac Hudibras idea imagination imitation instance interest invention Johnson Lady laugh lively look Lord lover ludicrous Madam manners mind mistress moral never night novel object original painted passion person play pleasure poem poet poetry pretensions Rake's Progress reason refinement Richard Brinsley Sheridan ridiculous romantic satire scene School for Scandal seems sense sentiment serious Shakspeare shew sort Spectator spirit stage story style Tartuffe Tatler thee thing thou thought tion Tom Jones truth turn vice whole wife WILD words Wycherley